Half the men reported the attack to police, compared with just over a quarter of the women.

The poll of 1,561 women and 1,419 men by ITV’s This
Morning found that one in three people know someone who has had
their drink spiked

Nearly two thirds think celebrities “get off more
lightly” in court.

Almost half say sentences for drug possession are not
tough enough

54 per cent want the return of the death penalty.

One
in three say they should be told where paedophiles live.

Nearly
three quarters believe prisoners
get too many luxuries.

About 1,000 people are convicted of rape each year out of an average
3,000 cases brought, according to figures from the Ministry of Justice,
the Home Office and the Office for
National Statistics.

Many of the statistics are old hat and of no surprise to me or, no doubt, any of the readers of the Daily Mirror

The one statistic that I find surprising is that men are more likely to report abuse than women. Accepting for one moment that women who are abused may be in relationships with their abuser, which no doubt acts as a supressor out of fear, in general terms, females are more willing to disclose how they feel than women.

Here at Abney Garsden, we specialise in assisting the victims of abuse. We find that Male survivors of abuse have often kept their abuse a closely guarded secret until something triggers them into doing something about it. We then have the privelige of being the first person they have ever told about their abuse.

Men often display much more damage than women according to psychologists because they have internalised all their negative feelings, and not been able to disclose anything due the shame of the allegations they make, which usuall involve a homosexual relationship with an older male care worker/religious leader/teacher when an infant. They often fear that if they tell anyone, they will be rejected, outcast, and shunned by their friends and family, hence the silence for so many years.